4.6 Article

Modeling Nonlinear Aeroelastic Forces for Bridge Decks with Various Leading Edges Using LSTM Networks

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app13106005

Keywords

flutter; long-span bridges; bridge deck; CFD simulation; reduced-order modeling; LSTM network

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With the increase in long-span bridges and the threat of intense hurricanes under climate change, mitigating flutter risk in bridge design is crucial. This study proposes an efficient reduced-order model based on LSTM network to simulate nonlinear aeroelastic forces on bridge decks and predict their post-flutter behavior.
With the rapid increase in bridge spans, the mitigation of risk to flutter (aeroelastic instability) is of critical importance in the design of long-span bridges, especially considering the more frequent intense hurricanes under climate change. Although the strong nonlinearities of the aeroelastic (self-excited) forces in wind-bridge interactions can be well captured through either numerical simulations or experimental tests, both are expensive and time consuming. Hence, it is important to develop an efficient reduced-order model for the simulations of nonlinear aeroelastic forces on the bridge decks. This study proposes a reduced-order model based on the long short-term memory (LSTM) network to simulate the nonlinear aeroelastic forces on bridge decks with various leading edges, and thus rapidly predict the corresponding post-flutter behaviors of long-span bridges. To generate the training datasets, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was employed to simulate the nonlinear aeroelasticities of bridge decks with a wide range of leading-edge configurations and wind speeds. Trained on the high-fidelity CFD datasets, the LSTM network takes the motion of a bridge deck, leading-edge angles and wind speeds as inputs and outputs the nonlinear aeroelastic forces on the bridge decks. A hybrid loss function utilizing the prediction errors of both aeroelastic forces simulated by the LSTM network and the bridge deck responses calculated by the Newmark-beta algorithm was introduced into the training process to improve the network performance. The prediction results of the trained LSTM model were compared with the CFD simulations, which demonstrated that the nonlinear aeroelastic forces of the bridge deck with various leading edges can be accurately and efficiently acquired by the proposed LSTM model.

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